Emil cobnely



(No Model.)

B. GORNELY.

STOP MOTION MECHANISM FOR SEWING AND BMBROIDERING MACHINES. No. 345,887. Patented July 20, 1886.

I mm

mWM/y UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.

EMIL CORNELY, OF PARIS, FRANCE.

STOP-MOTION MECHANISM FOR SEWING AND EMBROIDERING MACHINES.

QBPECIFJIQATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 345,887, dated July 20, 1886. Application filed February 15, 1886. Serial No. 191,960. (No model.)

To all whom it may concern.-

Be it known that I, EMIL OoRNnLY, of Paris, in the Republic of France, a resident of Vashington, in the District of Columbia, have invented a new and useful Improvement in Stop-Motion Mechanism for Sewing and Embroidering Machines, which is fully set forth in the following specification.

In Letters Patent No. 182,804.,of October 3, 1876, I have described and claimed a hand stop-motion applicable to crank-handle embroidering and sewing machines.

The object of the present application is a modification thereof for a certain style of ma chines in which the said crank-handle stopmotion cannot be wellapplied.

In the drawings, Figure 1 represents an elevation of acrank-handlc machine which is provided with a column to embroider hats and other hollow articles. Fig. 2 represents a detached view of the improved stop-motion.

crank-handle.

The column A is secured to the bed-plate B, and the head of the machine is raised to a corresponding height by a casting, G, in a similar manner, as is the case in sewing-machines which are provided with columns.

The modification in the operating parts of the machine consist merely in the prolongation of the shaft m of the oscillating looper I, which extends through the entire height of the column A. and which plays within the same.

It has been found that the operation of the machine when used as a column machine becomes very difficult when the. crank-handle for guiding the same is below the table, as has been the case heretofore, for the reason that the work is so much more elevated above the bcd-plate'B that the operator cannot conveniently reach the crank-handle without stooping. It became therefore necessary to set the machine in motion.

-ing witnesses.

which extends into the collar g of the handle N, which is fitted upon the rod 29, and which can slide thereon upward and downward. A vertical rod, E, can play freely within the tube Z), and is provided with two heads, 4 and 5, which bear respectively against the forked extremities 6 and 2 of the levers G and D, which latter is hinged to the frame of the machine at a and which operates the'stop-motion of the machine in the manner described in Letters Patent No. 83,910 and 182,804.

In pressing the handle N downward, the forked end 6 of the lever G will rise and will pull the rod E upward and with it the end 2 of the stop-motion lever D, which will thus Upon releasing the handle N the motion will be reversed and the machine will be stopped.

I claim- In a sewing or embroidcring machine of the character described, the combination,with the universal feed and the stop mechanism, of the crank-handle located above the bed-plate of the machine for operating said feed and stop mechanism, substantially as described.

In testimony whereof I have signed this specification in the presence of two subscrib EMIL GORNELY.

- \Vitnesses:

R0131. M. HooPEr-t, DAVID J. J. FULLER. 

